Written by Ian Matthews April 12, 2006 – Last Updated Nov 23, 2018
“He was a big, ebullient, tough, brawling businessman who had no fear and only one item on his agenda: winning the game.” But like most titans, he did not start out that way.
In 1939 at just 10 years of age he watched the Nazi’s invade his home town of Lodz Poland and was thrilled by the spectacle. “It was a fantastic thing” he recalls. His birth name is Idek Tramielksi and so by 1944 his family had been railed to Auschwitz. There, he was personally examined by “The Angel of Death” Josef Mengele and within months his father was dead from what he thought was overexertion. Jack later learned it was the result of a Mengele “experiment”; an injection of gasoline. Only a few months later the Americans liberated this death camp.
For the next couple of years he took odd jobs including one in an American Army kitchen and not surprisingly focused his life on food. He also found his mother had not perished in the camps and he was able to meet her again in Lodz. Soon after, in 1947, he married another survivor Helen Goldgrub and then promptly emigrated to the US.
Jack took more handyman type jobs and learned English from watching American movies. At this point in his life he had already become bold and brash, “I figured I could handle just about anything” given his camp experiences. “60 individuals (lived) from 10-thousand people. I was one of those 60. So from there on nothing was difficult to me.”
In 1948 he joined the US Army and became responsible for repairing primarily mechanical office equipment in the New York City area (remember there were not much in the way of electronics back then) . “At the same time I attended an IBM School for Office Technology. It was also there where I learnt to repair electric typewriters.”
After four years in the military he took a job for just $50 ($550 in 2018 dollars) a week in a downtrodden typewriter repair shop. He worked his military connections to secure a service contract on several thousand machines but was shocked when he did not get a raise or a bonus. “I have no intention of working for people who had no brains” he told his boss on his way out the door.
This is one of the early events showing, Jacks understanding of the necessity for reward. Later in life he would hone his personality evaluation skills to the point where he could very quickly figure out what motivated an individual. Money, benefits, praise, corporate titles were all equivalents to Jack which could be traded depending on the person. This is the kind of motivation analysis is taught in every Business School but it remains an elusive skill which very few managers are able to calculate.
Given Jacks interest in the foreign countries and his travels to date “it was no large step to move to Toronto (in 1954) with my activities later on. I thought that in a country smaller than the US my chances would be bigger… And here we did exactly the same thing again: we fixed used typewriters for stores which sold them. Incidentally we bought a agency of an Italian typewriter manufacturer named Everest.”
Note the emphasis on self reliance and that business is all about performance for Jack. Don’t just sign the deal… write a cheque!
To broaden the business and reduce dependency on a limited set of large clients, he expanded into the manufacture of mechanical adding machines using German parts. “I overtook the agency for Canada and the US. In 1962 I bought the whole company and suddenly a German company with 2000 workers, most of them in Berlin, was mine.”
As a result of the acquisition “I literally worked 24 hours a day. However, my family was not so happy with this situation because I was barely at home. One day my oldest son who was just 13 back then: Dad, when I’m grown up I don’t want to be like you, I want to have time for my family. I tried to give him a reply: Well, you know, normal people have a family similar to a tree with his strong branches, but my tree has been just cut down. As a result I have to build a new one and you are one branch of it. Please, you have to understand it: I have to rebuild everything – and that’s why I have just so little time.”
This is someone who understands adversity as a motivator. “That surely was a turning-point in my life. From there on my family was very important to me.”
In 1962 Jack needed money to pay back high interest loans Commodore had taken from C Powel Morgan, President of Atlantic Acceptance. He took Commodore public, selling shares at the bargain basement price of $2.50. By the mid-1960’s there were allegations of fake financials and dummy companies used to jack up (pardon the pun) the stock price. Atlantic, Canada’s sixth largest financial institution, went bankrupt and Commodores good name went with it. The Canadian Federal Government began hearings into the scandal and things looked pretty bleak for Jack. Out of a 3 year 1700 page report, 200 pages were devoted to Commodore or Jack Tramiel.
While writing this article we interviewed several former Commodore mangers who claim that while nothing was definitively proven, it was clear that Jack had serious involvement in these schemes. Although Morgan public blamed Jack for his direction in some of the “bad” loans, Jack was able to avoid prosecution when Morgan, soon to die for leukemia, accepted much of the responsibility for the frauds. One ex-Commodorian who wants to remain anonymous said “He took the blame for everyone”.
Irving told Jack about the Japanese electronics business and sent him on a multi-month Asian trip to learn about electronic calculators. Within a few years, much of Commodores operations and Jack personally had moved to California’s Silicon Valley.
Jack thought of me as his son… He likely thought I was Jewish because of my last name. I’m not Jewish; I’m from Pennsylvania with Pennsylvania-Dutch (German) background, have some close friends who are Jewish and I raised Lutheran.” The next parts of Bill’s story are quite telling about Jacks aggressive personality and what even people close to him will do to avoid his rage.
Bill was supposed to design chips for Commodore’s primary revenue stream in 1978; calculators. The first project was to develop an “equivalent to the the Toshiba LC5K3” Bill recalls. He agreed to work for little more than expenses paid twice a month by Commodore and his big pay off was “…supposed to be a royalty paid on each chip.” But he never got a dime because Jack had no intention of using Bill’s designs; “they were used to barter with the Japanese!” Jack would go to Toshiba, show them Bill’s design to prove he could manufacture his own chip then Toshiba would capitulate. Jack was fond of saying he “would get the Japanese price”. After Bill designed another Japanese clone, Jack used the same technique to negotiate substantial price concessions from Japanese manufacturers.
1973 COMMODORE MINI-SLIDE RULE CALCULATOR – From a December 1973 advertisement in Playboy… um uh ummmm yaaa well, this was the what I was looking for in the magazine… I was shocked to find naked women… I suppose I will have to take one for the team and scan all the old Playboys for Commodore materials. Its a tough job but I will sacrifice myself for Commodore.
Jack pushed into making calculators with Texas Instruments designed chips and Commodore flourished. He expanded Commodore into worldwide manufacturing and distribution. A good friend of mine worked for Irving Gould in the mid 1990’s and was surprised to hear him say “I made more money on calculators than those fucking computers.” Like all products however, there is a life-cycle and when demand softened, Jack made the mistake of letting inventories build up. Then the unthinkable happened; without warning, Texas Instruments (TI) started retailing their own calculators for less than Jacks manufacturing cost. In 1975 Commodore lost $5 million on sales of $50 million ($225 million in 2018 dollars).
Jack just made the single most important decision of his business life. With MOS came three things which would soon turn Jacks typewriter / calculator company into a global juggernaut which would set the standard for success for the a decade:
From here things move very quickly for Jack. He agrees to let Chuck Peddle design and produce what would become the Commodore PET, the worlds first Personal Computer. The problem is that he had spent all his money keeping the company alive and buying MOS. “It would take a lot of money I still did not have.” Jack went back to basics and just like his Sears contract days he said, if you want it, you’ll have to pay in advance. Jack guessed the PET would be profitable in volume at $599 a machine so he ran newspaper adverts offering six week delivery on pre-paid machines. He received a whopping $3 million in cheques. When ordered the PET into production for Europe he doubled the price and sold more than ever
Jack had every territory operate independently: The American head office developed new products but each region of the world had almost complete control over distribution and promotion. When the C64 came out the Australians did not want to have a particular feature installed on it and told head office that they would open every box and remove it! The Japanese barely saw the Commodore 64 but were the only market to received the MAX Machine. Germany started making IBM PC Clones; they build their own factory and came up with their own Europe wide distribution system.
It is in this environment and at this scale where Jack’s harsh management style which shines. His credo is “Business is War” and it shows in nearly everything he does:
Under his rough brand of management, Commodore became the worlds first computer company to reach a billion dollars in sales and a million units sold. Unfortunately Jack burned so many suppliers and employees in California, they had to leave. Vendors just did not want to sell to him. This cut throat reputation would dog him the rest of his business life.
Irving also wanted to leave a substantial debt in place while Jack did not. Jack said “…we never had a raise of stock since we went to stock market in 1962. With the 120 million dollars we would have earned by giving away 2 million new shares we could have paid back all debts we had at the banks and by that strengthen the companies position. The man I worked for (Irving) was of the opinion that this would weaken his share of the company and cut his influence – which was totally wrong.”
Jack and Irving had it out during the Consumer Electronics Show while he was announcing his new Commodore Plus/4, a low cost TI-99 Killer. “We came to that point when I said, that I will have to quit if I cannot do what I think would be best for the company. He said very kindly that if I will not do what he wants to do, then I could leave. And so I left.” At the public announcement on January 15, 1984, the computer industry, Commodore shareholders and financial analysts were shocked. Irving had removed the founder and visionary leader of a the worlds largest and most powerful home computer company.
Jack brought two of his sons, Garry and Sam on board right away but Leonard stayed at Commodore for a few more months.
1987 brought the acquisition of Federated Group, which owned an electronic retail chain. Again, Jack wanted to control as much of the system as possible. By 1990 Atari sold 26 of Federated’s stores to “Silo” and closed the balance.
Given his reputation, Jack was not able to attract the quality skilled labour and suppliers he needed to invent the next big thing. Sales of Atari’s primary products were in free fall and they were forced to restructure and drastically downsize again.
In an effort to raise cash to keep the company liquid, Jack traded a license to Atari’s old games to Sega for $90 million in 1994.
Jack owned a hard drive manufacturer called JTS which had a large OEM contract with DELL. I believe JTS was largely run Jacks sons at this point but have been unable to verify this. JTS produced inexpensive old technology hard drives with very high failure rates. I am a computer dealer in my real life and I remember selling JTS drives… not a good decision on my part!
At the end of 1996 Jack pushed the remnants of the once great Atari into JTS Corporation. Hasbro bought the Atari Division from JTS in March of 1998. JTS was formally shut down in 2000.
I am sure Jack was disappointed with the failure but he likely takes solace in the fact that Atari outlived Commodore which started shutting down in 1993 and formally went bankrupt.
In 1986 interview he said “Well a very happy person because I, I’m just looking at that in 1945 I was reborn, I don’t look back, I do remember (the Nazi camp) but I don’t have any hate in me. I have built a company, I have built a family, I have three sons and four grandchildren and they all know about my background and about success and they’re all working together with me, my three sons are part of my company, and we are very happy with what we’ve accomplished.”
During his retirement Jack Tramiel lived a life of luxury from his primary palatial estate atop a foothill in Monte Sereno California. He manages his money, enjoys his Rolls Royce’s and generally refuses to publicly talk about Commodore or Atari. However, he was active providing periodic speeches at Holocaust related events and supports Jewish causes such as the “Holocaust Memorial Museum”.
On Sunday April 8th 2012, Jack Tramiel passed away. You can read more or comment on his death in our forum.
Descriptions of Jack from people who knew him include words like: charming, harsh, intelligent, driven, challenging, difficult and demanding. While many have very strong opinions of the man and his myth, no one can argue that he was not a great pioneer who blazed a new trail that affected all our lives.
In May of 2006 it was reported that an investigation of Jack Tramiel’s acquisition of Atari property resulted in a $1.8M judgment against him. Read all the details HERE or look at all our magazine articles HERE.
You can see from Jacks donation record that he apparently changed from a Democrat to a small “R” Republican after September 11th 2001.
Another interesting theory of Jack’s historic split with Commodore was presented by Bill Mensch during an April 2006 interview with www.commodore.ca. “Jack is far too shrewd to think HE quit Commodore… he knew the limitations of Commodore’s technology. He knew the impact IBM, Microsoft, and Intel would have. (Commodore was) doomed by the competition. …You can bet he cashed out his stock; he knew he was at the peak.” Bill believes that the stories of a fight with Irving are likely accurate, just incomplete. “Jack would have instigated a fight… so he could sell his stock without being investigated by the FTC (for insider trading).” It is important to note that this is just a theory and not an accusation or statement of fact.
In May of 2006 as a rebuttal to this, Michael Tomczyk, (Jack’s personal assistant) told us: “The thought that Jack instigated his own departure is totally false. He was caught by surprise and was on a flight back to California while the board meeting was still in progress, that’s how off-guard he was by the vote. He did cash out because Irving who is a fair minded businessman, bought out half his shares, and he dumped the rest on the market which crashed the price from $90 to $6 in six months. Jack was planning strongly to bring his three sons into the company to continue the culture he began and there was never any thought of his cashing out at that time in history. Anyone who believes or asserts that is trying to revise history. I believe I am quite informed because I was there and was in contact with many of the participants at the time this occurred.”
Bill has since responded with “Well then that worked out very well for Jack and I can forget the idea that Jack cashed out because he saw the light. Jack deserved a break from everything he experienced in life up until then and it would appear that although Michael’s claim is no doubt true the timing for Jack getting out was impeccable and perhaps guided by a higher power!”
1928: Idek (Jack) Tramielski is Born in Lodz, Poland.
1939: Jack and his parents are forced from their home into a ghetto after German troops occupy Lodz and relocate the city’s Jews.
1944: Jack’s family are placed on an Auschwitz-bound train. Tramiel and his father are assigned to concentration camp construction in Hanover, Germany. Jacks father dies after being injected with gasoline.
1945: The U.S. Army liberates Auschwitz.
1947: Jack married Helen Goldgrub and emigrates to New York a year before his Helen does
1948: Helen arrives in New York and has their first child. Jack joins the U.S. Army, which assigns him to repairing office equipment in New York.
1955: Jack relocates to Toronto Canada because he can get and exclusive territory deal to import typewriters. His typewriter store uses the Commodore Business Machines International name. The company grows from importing typewriters to manufacturing the devices as well as adding machines.
1962: Commodore raises money to expand by selling shares on the public stock exchange.
1968: Jack moved to Silicon Valley to capitalize on the developing electronics revolution and starts developing electronic calculators.
1975: Commodore, under Jack’s direct control, acquires chip manufacturer MOS Technology to produce chips for his calculators.
1976: Chuck Peddle, MOS,s lead engineer becomes the father of the personal computer by covincing Jack to produce the Commodore PET which is introduced at the Januay Comdex, 6 months before the Apple I (which also uses the Commodore/MOS 6502 CPU).
1981: Jack approves the Commodore VIC 20 which sells in unheard of numbers
1982: Jack approves the Commodore 64 for $600 which progressively drops to less than half that in years to come.
1984: Jack disagrees shows off the new Commodore 264 “Ted” Series” a the January Comdex and three days later quits over an reported disagreement with Canada’s Irving Gould, Commodores major stockholder. Size months later, Warner Communications gives its failing and cash hemorrhaging Atari Corp. to Tramiel for almost nothing.
1985: To dramatically cut costs and increase time to market, Jack consolidates Atari’s world wide facilities to a single complex in Silicon Valley. Atari starts to make money although never becomes the juggernaut that Commodore was.
1994: Commodore files for bankruptcy and Jack says nothing publicly about his long lost firm.
1996: Tramiel sells financially troubled Atari to Jugi Tandon Systems (JTS), an India based disk-drive manufacturer. Jack retains a financial interest but has no operational control of Atari. Jack retires in luxury with his wife in Monte Sereno, California.
1998: Hasbro buys Atari and Jack makes no public statements.
2002: Jack makes (very) small donations to the Republican National Committee which is a change from his previous small donations to the Democratic party
2004: Jack visits Auschwitz with his sons and continues to support Holocaust related events and facilities
2006: Jack has a $1.8M judgment against him relating to the acquisition on Atari property.
2012: April 8th Jack Tramiel dies.
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This was very informative. I didn't know Jack Tramiel was one of the all time great entrepeneurs. I appreciate the clarity and depth.
Hi,
I hope you can help me. In behalf of Emigration Museum in Gdynia (Poland)
I would like ask you about your photo collection. For emerging main
exhibition of museum I search photos of mr Jack Tramiel which will be show in "USA careers". This part of exhibition will show famous US people with polish origins.
Do you have any photos of mr Tramiel and copyrights for it? Could you send me few photo for choice?
And if we'll chose some, how is the cost of good quality scan (300 DPI or more) and copyrights?
If you don't have photos (or copyright) could you help me and contact with somebody who have it?
Thanks for your help.
Faithfully,
Olga Pieńkowska
Hi Olga;
We have only what we show on the website. Our paper documentation is in storage and it would take many hours to retrieve and then scan. You can use any of our photo's for your Museum as long as you provide a credit.
Thanks and have a great day.